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Showing posts with label EPA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EPA. Show all posts
Thursday, May 28, 2015
ENP STAFF REPORTS
news@eastniagarapost.com

                                                                                                                       
Niagara County was awarded a $400,000 EPA grant for brownfields — the 
only county in the state to receive funds. (ENP FILE PHOTO BY
HEATHER N. GRIMMER)
SANBORN — Niagara County officials pointed to hard work by Economic Development staff as the reason Niagara County was the sole county in New York state to receive an award for brownfields assessment from the federal Environmental Protection Agency.

The $400,000 award, the result of a nationwide competition open to all local governments, states, tribes, quasi-governmental organizations, and non-profit entities, was the only one issued in New York state—a fact that the chairman of the Niagara County Legislature’s Economic Development Committee, Legislator Rick Updegrove, R-Lockport, said is no accident.

“Niagara County has made reclaiming lands contaminated by industrial and commercial processes a top priority of its economic development efforts over the past dozen years,” Updegrove said. “The Niagara County Center for Economic Development has a track record of success leading efforts to restore contaminated properties and return them to the tax rolls, and this grant will further that effort.”

Updegrove noted the specific funding request, developed by Brownfields Development Corp. President Amy Fisk, a senior planner at the county’s Center for Economic Development, would be used by the county to assess potential brownfield sites throughout the county for rehabilitation. The award is actually a pair of $200,000 grants: one will be used to assess petroleum-contaminated sites, and one will focus on hazardous substance sites.

Fisk and Updegrove also stressed that the county placed an emphasis on assessing tax-delinquent parcels. This includes both Phase I and Phase II Environmental Site Assessments, which range from review of paperwork and database information to on-site sampling and testing.

“Determining the level of contamination will allow these properties to be remediated and returned to productive use, returning them to the tax rolls and allowing the private sector to create jobs there,” Updegrove said. “Cleaning up and reinvesting in these properties protects the environment, reduces blight, and takes development pressures off greenspaces and working lands.”

The grant will allow assessments countywide. Municipal government leaders are encouraged to contact Fisk at the Center for Economic Development about potential sites within their jurisdictions. Funding is not directly available to businesses or municipalities, but Economic Development staff will work with interested businesses and municipalities to determine potential sites for assessment.

Fisk noted that funding may be utilized for sites countywide, and known priority sites within the county’s Brownfield Opportunity Areas would likely be targeted. The Brownfield Opportunity Areas include the City of Lockport Downtown Tourism area, the Buffalo Avenue area in Niagara Falls, the City of North Tonawanda Brownfield Opportunity Area, and the Highland Avenue area in the city of Niagara Falls.



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Wednesday, July 23, 2014
Demolition is now underway on 89 Mill Street. The Environmental Protection Agency says the building will be down in the next two to three months. (PHOTOS BY HEATHER N. GRIMMER / ENP PHOTOGRAPHER)

ENP STAFF REPORTS
news@eastniagarapost.com


Workers wear masks at the site to prevent breathing in asbestos.
The United States Environmental Protection Agency began demolition today of the former power and steam generating plant at 89 Mill St. in Lowertown.

The building, which is in serious disrepair, is a hazard, according to the EPA, in large part because of asbestos contained within.

"As a result of the potential threat of release of asbestos fibers into the environment from inside the building, in 2012, the EPA applied an encapsulant over the interior of the building which prevents asbestos from becoming airborne," according to a press release from the EPA.

The EPA's primary contractor for the project is Environmental Restoration, which has subcontracted with Titanium Demolition and Remediation of Lockport to perform the demolition of the structure.

While demolition is occurring, workers will use fire hoses to keep the debris from generating dust as much as possible. Six air monitoring stations have been established around the perimeter of the building, which will monitor the dust in the air, a sample of which will be sent to a lab for asbestos analysis daily.

Once the building is demolished to the ground level, the basement will be evaluated. It is believed there is more asbestos is present there, the EPA said. Asbestos-contaminated debris will be kept wet at all times and transported to an approved landfill in double-lined sealed trucks. Non-contaminated debris may be used to fill in the basement.

In all, the project is expected to take two to three months and cost approximately $500,000. It is funded by the EPA with the expectation that they will recoup some or all of their costs from the current or former owners.

The building was most recently purchased in 2010 by Liberty Plant Maintenance, which began to dismantle the building, further disturbing the asbestos, according to the EPA.

The New York State Department of Labor and Department of Environment Conservation have overseen the site since 2010 and requested EPA involvement in March of 2012.

A crane works on demolition of 89 Mill St. this afternoon.



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